I started downloading CBSRMT from Mysteryshows.com. I love them!
I remember my dad talking about them when I was a kid.
He said that public radio also carried a lot of shows in the 70s and 80s.
Are there any stations carrying drama today?

I started downloading CBSRMT from Mysteryshows.com. I love them!
I remember my dad talking about them when I was a kid.
He said that public radio also carried a lot of shows in the 70s and 80s.
Are there any stations carrying drama today?

Happy Listening.

Solar

Welcome to the forum Solar! I know they offer one old time radio chanel on serious satellite radio but it's not 24 hours. Sometimes they put sports on it.

Larry Haines stars as an up-and-coming businessman, about to become CEO of his father-in-law's corporation, who is suddenly confronted by a blackmailer. Writer Sidney Sloan gives it the classic film noir slant - "There are only two ways to deal with a blackmailer" says Haines.

Good solid episode. Also stars Anne Meacham and Jackson Beck.

CBS RADIO MYSTERY THEATER #205

"Faith and the Faker" January 14, 1975

A reluctant faith healer finds he has the power to heal all the residents of his island home... except his wife who is unable to walk. He is told this is because his wife was not born on the island and doesn't have the unconditional faith that the island people do.

Stars Howard Da Silva and Mary Jane Higby.

Writer Elspeth Eric gives us an unusual script with more character development and less violence than most episodes of this show. Nice performance from Da Silva, who I remember seeing as a heavy on many television shows of the period._________________tuned in from down under

An ethical dilemma for a young lawyer who finds out the man he defended for murder is actually guilty. What will he do? Should he accept the offer of a friendly gangster to "get rid" of the problem for him? Tony Roberts stars.

Henry Slesar wrote several stories for CBS RMT. I remember him mainly as a writer of mystery short stories in the 1960s, though some may recall him as head writer on the soap opera Edge Of Night. This is a nice little yarn, with an ending that's unexpected but not an outrageous twist.

CBS RADIO MYSTERY THEATER #33

"Conspiracy to Defraud" February 8, 1974

A federal agent goes to Paris to trace heroin shipments. He meets a Greek gangster and a woman whose family are involved in an insurance racket. Stars Paul Hecht.

This is introduced as a slice of foreign intrigue, but I'm afraid it wasn't that intriguing. It held the attention, but I wouldn't have been that upset if I'd been interrupted before we got to the climax. Sidney Sloan wrote a lot of scripts for the show, presumably most of them better than this one._________________tuned in from down under

CBS RADIO MYSTERY THEATRE #117
The Devil-God July 11, 1974
Written by Mary Jane Higby

A young couple go out west to see a ranch they've inherited. At first they're dismissive of a local legend that their valuable palomino horse is now sacred to an Indian god, but they change their minds when a terrible storm descends on them.

Cast: Ruby Dee, Mandel Kramer, Leon Janney, Guy Sorel

Stories about curses can be a bit bland - you tell the hero he'll die if he goes something, he does it and he dies, the end. But this one kept me glued to the story. The actors do a good job with their characters and the sound effects are pretty good for the period.

Maybe not the most subtle of titles though.

Somebody on another website expressed surprise at the casting of Ruby Dee as a western heiress, but that's the magic of radio!

(By the way, I'm not sure if your copy of this episode has any problems, but here's a copy where I tinkered with the volume a little to make it more even http://www.mediafire.com/?mhxjwe2c92e )_________________tuned in from down under

The sad thing is a lot of today's young people don't have the patience to sit and listen. I tried to play a CBSRMT episode for my niece one time and she listened for about a minute before she got up, said "I don't get it," and walked away. They don't call 'em the "ADD generation" for nothing...

Brad wrote:

People don't know what they're missing. Old time radio shows like CBSRMT and Suspense are great. The young people now a days have never heard shows like this. What a shame. They're so good.

I remember listening to the CBSRMT shows when I was a kid(I'm 37). lol. At night before bed I'd lay on my parents bed and listen to their radio as E.G. Marshall would present that evening's tale. It was my first introduction to the fun of Old Time Radio programming. I most likely missed the first few seasons since I was just 3 yrs old when it started in 1974 but I always enjoyed listening to it. I think that programs like CBSRMT are better than much of what is on TV today. There's just something about listening to a program that can't be duplicated with the television. From the time the door creaks open til the time it slams shut you're guaranteed an entertaining experience.

solarpons wrote:

I started downloading CBSRMT from Mysteryshows.com. I love them!
I remember my dad talking about them when I was a kid.
He said that public radio also carried a lot of shows in the 70s and 80s.
Are there any stations carrying drama today?

Wow! I just downloaded the CBSRMT episode titled: "It's Simply Murder" and I'm amazed at how much better the audio quality is than many of the other episodes,some of which can be hard to hear. From what I understand many of the episode swhere recorded on home cassette tape recorders back at the time of original broadcast,so the audio quality varies greatly. Some of the people that recorded them were in their early teens as I was back then. Just this last year I was happy to find them on the internet,I wondered if I'd ever get to hear them again and always regreted loosing the ones I had recorded back in 77' and 78' when I was just 14. This particular episode seems crystal clear compared to others and shows us what they would sound like If Hyman Brown would ever release the original copies for sale! By the way,if your interested in hearing it, it is episode #64 from March 27,1974. It's my goal to hear one each day. I started with the first episode. Happy Listening everyone

To date, Himan Brown has kept the master recordings locked in his vault, so the only recordings in circulation are those made by listeners back in the day. Not sure why he hasn't made any effort to put them out in a retail package. I'm sure there would be a ready market for them. To his credit, though, he is cool with the non-commercial distribution of audience recordings of the shows, according to a statement from his daughter that I read on fearyoucanhear.com.

Britt Reid wrote:

Wow! I just downloaded the CBSRMT episode titled: "It's Simply Murder" and I'm amazed at how much better the audio quality is than many of the other episodes,some of which can be hard to hear. From what I understand many of the episodes were recorded on home cassette tape recorders back at the time of original broadcast,so the audio quality varies greatly. Some of the people that recorded them were in their early teens as I was back then. Just this last year I was happy to find them on the internet,I wondered if I'd ever get to hear them again and always regreted loosing the ones I had recorded back in 77' and 78' when I was just 14. This particular episode seems crystal clear compared to others and shows us what they would sound like If Hyman Brown would ever release the original copies for sale! By the way,if your interested in hearing it, it is episode #64 from March 27,1974. It's my goal to hear one each day. I started with the first episode. Happy Listening everyone

Hopefully someone can help me. I was working my way thru the free Mystery Theatre shows and I see if has been moved but can't seem to find it anywhere. Could someone point me in right direction? Thank you.

Hopefully someone can help me. I was working my way thru the free Mystery Theatre shows and I see if has been moved but can't seem to find it anywhere. Could someone point me in right direction? Thank you.

I'm sorry. Those had to be moved into the club members area because of bandwidth issues.